These self-driving cars will also religiously follow traffic rules, as it will speed up the overall system and governments will make it part of their certification process.
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No need to speed anyway, as self-driving cars react faster than humans and can thus go faster.pic.twitter.com/r28cPHdkz2
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This does bring us to the point of regulation. Many observers point out that it might be the single largest stumbling block for full autonomy, though I’m hopeful.
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People and companies in your place will see the personal benefits of self-driving cars once a neighboring city, state, or country allows for it. That creates competitive pressure to update regulation. Governments are slow, but this will move faster than you think.
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Governments will want to certify that self-driving cars are “safe,” which honestly will be an industry itself. Most of these cars will use some form of machine learning, so we likely need simulations as opposed to formal verification.
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Once regulation is adjusted, there will be a transition phase with mixed manual/self-driving traffic. This will make self-driving look worse than it really is, because the manual traffic is less predictable. We honestly can’t do much about it (see investments needed above).
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Replying to @thijsniks
Thijs Niks, putting the 'blog' in 'microblog', haha.
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Replying to @mkampschreur @Ljosmyndun
Het is nou ook weer geen Tolstoj, Marjoleinpic.twitter.com/jrcQa5hn2H
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Replying to @thijsniks @Ljosmyndun
Haha maar wel te lang voor nu. Wat is de korte versie? Over 10 jaar Uber rules tha world?
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